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Effects of a controlled diet supplemented with chickpeas on serum lipids, glucose tolerance, satiety and bowel function.

Journal of the American College of Nutrition
August 1, 2007
Jane K Pittaway et al. (4 authors)
Journal ArticleRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, Non-U.S. Gov'tHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to compare the effects of a chickpea-supplemented diet versus a wheat-based diet on serum lipids, glucose tolerance, satiety, and bowel function.

Results Summary

The chickpea diet significantly reduced serum TC and LDL-C compared to the wheat diet, though partly due to unintended macronutrient changes. It improved perceived bowel health and satiety for some participants, with no significant difference in glucose tolerance.

Population

27 free-living adults (with a sub-group of 18 for additional testing).

Effective Dosage

Diet included canned drained chickpeas, bread, and shortbread biscuits with 30% chickpea flour (specific amounts not detailed).

Duration

Two 5-week crossover interventions (plus a third 5-week phase for the sub-group).

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
diet supplemented with chickpeas
decrease
serum TC
free-living adults
0.25 mmol/L
reductions
#1
diet supplemented with chickpeas
decrease
LDL-C
free-living adults
0.20 mmol/L
reductions
#2
diet supplemented with chickpeas
increase
PUFA consumption
free-living adults
-
increase
#3
diet supplemented with chickpeas
decrease
MUFA consumption
free-living adults
-
decrease
#4
diet supplemented with chickpeas
no change
glucose tolerance
free-living adults
-
no significant difference
#5
diet supplemented with chickpeas
increase
perceived general bowel health
free-living adults
-
improved significantly
#6
diet supplemented with chickpeas
increase
satiety
some participants
-
greater satiety
#7
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare the effect of a diet supplemented with chickpeas to a wheat-based diet of similar fibre content on serum lipids, glucose tolerance, satiety and bowel function. A third, lower-fibre wheat diet provided further information on dietary fibre quantity and bowel function and satiety. METHOD: Twenty-seven free-living adults followed two randomized, crossover dietary interventions each of five weeks duration. The chickpea diet included canned drained chickpeas, bread and shortbread biscuits containing 30% chickpea flour. The wheat diet included high-fibre wheat breakfast cereals and wholemeal bread. The diets were isoenergetic to the participants' usual diet, matched for macronutrient content and controlled for dietary fibre. Following on from the second randomised intervention, a sub-group of 18 participants underwent a third, isoenergetic lower-fibre wheat diet that included low-fibre breakfast cereals and bread. RESULTS: Repeated measures ANOVA revealed reductions in serum TC of 0.25 mmol/L (p < 0.01) and LDL-C of 0.20 mmol/L (p = 0.02) following the chickpea diet compared to the wheat. An unintended significant increase in PUFA and corresponding decrease in MUFA consumption occurred during the chickpea diet and statistical adjustment for this reduced but did not eliminate the effect on serum lipids. There was no significant difference in glucose tolerance. Perceived general bowel health improved significantly during the chickpea diet although there was considerable individual variation. Some participants reported greater satiety during the chickpea diet. CONCLUSIONS: The small but significant decrease in serum TC and LDL-C during the chickpea diet compared to the equivalent fibre wheat diet was partly due to unintentional changes in macronutrient intake occurring because of chickpea ingestion. If dietary energy and macronutrients were not controlled, chickpea consumption might result in greater benefits via influence on these factors.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Analysis of VarianceBlood GlucoseCholesterolCholesterol, LDLCicerCross-Over StudiesDefecationDietary FiberFemaleGastrointestinal TransitHumansLipidsMaleMiddle AgedSatiationSurveys and QuestionnairesTriglyceridesTriticum
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety90
Efficacy75/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations34
Citations/Year1.9
Relative Citation Ratio0.96
NIH Percentile48.9%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.50
Weight Score1.10
Normalized Score0.83
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